Q: What causes snoring, and what can I do to stop it?
A: Snoring happens when the muscles in the tongue, roof of your
mouth and throat relax and constrict airflow. “You can’t get a full breath of
air, so things start vibrating as they try to allow you to breathe — and the
vibration is the snoring sound,” said Dr. Kent Smith, a sleep dentist in Dallas
and former president of the American Sleep and Breathing Academy.
اضافة اعلان
Men are about twice as likely to snore as women are, and it can
be caused by a number of things, including allergies, aging, a cold or even
just the distinctive shape of your throat. Your weight might also play a role.
“You’ve got this combination of tissues that over time, when you
gain weight, they gain weight,” Smith said. “And when you get older, they
become a little less toned. So they just tend to clog the airway.”
Excessively dry or wet air can aggravate snoring, as can
sleeping at a high altitude. Sleeping on your back or drinking alcohol before
bed tends to make it worse, further relaxing the muscles and allowing the
tongue to close the throat and restrict air.
Still, snoring itself is not a disorder, no matter what your
sleeping partner might say. But sometimes it can be a sign of sleep apnea, a
potentially serious condition that causes breathing to repeatedly stop and
start throughout the night, preventing you from getting a decent night’s rest.
It can also raise the risk of high blood pressure and even heart failure.
While loud snoring is usually associated with sleep apnea,
plenty of mild snorers have no health problems at all. It’s just one part of a
spectrum of disordered sleeping, ranging from those who snore to those for whom
the triggers of snoring cause them to lose sleep, said Dr. Jolie Chang, an
otolaryngologist at the University of California, San Francisco.
“Most people with sleep apnea snore,” she said, “but snoring
alone does not mean you have sleep apnea.”
If you are not sure if you snore, it’s easy to find out.
Download a recording app, such as SnoreLab, to your phone and run it while you
sleep. The app will start recording when it detects noises, and the next
morning you can listen to your own sonorous tones.
Once you know you are a snorer, even a subtle one, it might be
worthwhile to get a sleep test from a sleep clinic, Smith said. Most of the
time, the first one can be done at home in one night and will tell you if your
snoring is a symptom of a larger problem, like sleep apnea, based on how many
times per hour it interrupts your sleep.
What can you do if your snoring is mild?
A mild snorer might make noise at night, but still get plenty of
air, with the snoring only occasionally interrupting sleep. Whether or not your
occasional wood sawing is tied to wider problems, there are steps you can take
to lower the night noise.
Sleep on your side. About half of
snorers with sleep apnea in one Israeli study were found to stop when they
changed positions. There are pillows available to help you sleep on your side
and shirts that make it uncomfortable to roll on your back. For the DIY-types,
you can try sewing some tennis balls onto the back of your night shirt.
Strengthen your tongue. One of the
most common causes of snoring is when your tongue slides back in your throat.
The simplest way to prevent this is with a daily set of tongue exercises. But
Chang said it can take weeks to have an effect and most people are not diligent
in keeping them up.
There are also a steady stream of anti-snoring devices available
to buy online, most totally worthless. Chin straps, nose clips and strips,
nostril dilators — be wary of them, Chang said, they don’t work for everyone. A
humidifier might help you sleep better by moisturizing your nose and throat,
she added, but it probably can’t stop your snoring.
What if your snoring is moderate?
If your sleep study suggests your snoring is moderate — that the
lack of air is interrupting your sleep more than 15 times per hour — you should
see a sleep doctor, pulmonologist or ear, nose and throat specialist. They
might recommend the following:
CPAP (continuous positive airway pressure) machine. This
is a device that attaches to either your nose or your nose and mouth to
increase the amount of air getting past your throat.
Mouth guard. A mouth guard helps
to position the jaw a little bit forward so that the tongue cannot creep down
the throat and block it. It’s more convenient than a tube strapped to your
face, but it requires a skilled dentist and multiple visits to tailor it to
your teeth and jaw. Be sure that your insurance will cover it, and avoid
cheaper, over-the-counter guards, because they won’t work unless they are
calibrated correctly.
Weight loss. Another way for
some people to decrease snoring is to lose weight. Body mass index is reliably
connected to snoring and sleep apnea, Chang said, though every throat is
different. Losing weight will decrease the pressure on your windpipe and allow
more air to pass.
What should you do if you’re a severe snorer?
The chances are very high that extremely loud snorers are having
some form of apnea. If a sleep test indicates that your snoring is affecting
your sleep more than 30 times per hour you might be looking at more serious
problems down the line, such as heart disease and all the issues that accompany
insufficient sleep, like depression and anxiety.
CPAP machine. At this point,
don’t bother with the mouth guard, Smith said. “When you get into the severe
ranges of apnea, then CPAP is more predictable to solve your problem,” he said.
CPAP devices come in dozens of designs, some of which are not too intrusive.
But all require you to sleep with something covering part of your face that
connects to a softly whirring machine.
Surgery. A range of surgical
procedures — involving implants or changes to the tongue or soft palate — can
help a severe snorer, but only if CPAPs fail. “If you can’t do those or for
whatever reason you don’t want to,” Smith said, “then surgery should be last.
You should never jump to that first.”
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